Yes I can. Particularly for aboriginal women and girls, what we have seen across the country is a common theme of their not meeting the trafficking definition, and that means they have to be in fear for their safety. Aboriginal women oftentimes are not in fear for their safety because their traffickers are their boyfriends or husbands. That is very common across Canada. That's actually a shift which traffickers are now moving towards, because then there's no crime and they don't have to worry about being charged down the road. That is the intersection between domestic violence and trafficking.
A lot of women are presenting themselves in women's shelters. It's even harder to get to those women when they're trauma bonded with their trafficker. It requires a whole new set of interventions and services and consideration when we're looking at the long term on intervening and then helping them rebuild their lives.